White dot negative or positive

I am working on two Audiosource AMP TWO amps and the board marking seem wrong
all the positive leads are marked with a white dot, I thought that meant negative. am I wrong ?
check out all three blue caps in the picture

DSC07214.JPG
 
I would think that you're wrong in this case. Especially as the (-) stripe on the capacitor jacket is on the opposite side of the white dot. I assume none of the caps vent when you apply power, so they are oriented correctly...
 
just guessing
May be the +ve and -ve sign gets confused with alphaneumeric text ? The white blob may also be of traditional assembly method/sequence of placing components. Or may be the assemblers are following old methods of markings and dont want to change. The Jumpers also has white blobs.
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The unwritten convention is that the marking sign (can be a blob, strip or anything else) is on the - side for wet Ecaps, and + for solid types, like tantalum.
When there is no explicit polarity mark visible, the right of the text is the positive and the left is negative.
The silkscreen of the PCB is probably suited to tantalum caps
 
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just guessing
May be the +ve and -ve sign gets confused with alphaneumeric text ? The white blob may also be of traditional assembly method/sequence of placing components. Or may be the assemblers are following old methods of markings and dont want to change. The Jumpers also has white blobs.
View attachment 1309013
IF large caps and jumpers hace white dots, maybe they are assembly reminders.
Say 90% of board is machine assembled, and large or inconvenient componentsre later added by hand.
White dots help not missing one ore more by mistake.
Just thinking aloud.
 
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A white semicircle is a standard way of denoting the minus terminal on a capacitor - we have used that nomenclature in the past on our own capacitor outlines at my work place. Nowadays we just mark the plus side of the capacitor with a (+) sign.